Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire

A 24-item self-report measure of physical disability and activity limitation due to low back pain

Specialties: orthopaedics, pain_medicine, physiotherapy, general_practice, rheumatology | Areas: lumbar_spine

Time:5 min
Pages:2
Questions:24
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Example Assessment Result

Patient-Reported Outcome Measure

Total Score
72/100
Clinical InterpretationModerate Function
Section 1
Completed (8/10)
Section 2
Completed (7/10)
Remaining sections
All responses submitted
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TimingBaseline
Date15 Jan 2024

RMDQ Total Score14/24
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About the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire

The Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ) is one of the most widely used measures of how low back pain affects everyday activities. You answer Yes or No to 24 short statements. Your total score reflects how much your back problem is limiting you at present. It is often used in primary care, physiotherapy, and research to track change over time.

Prevalence:
common

Medical Specialties

Orthopaedics
Pain Medicine
Physiotherapy
General Practice
Rheumatology

Anatomic Areas

Lumbar Spine

Clinical Indications

Non Specific Low Back Pain
Acute Low Back Pain
Subacute Low Back Pain
Chronic Low Back Pain
Lumbar Spine Rehabilitation

Developer Information

Developed by Professor Martin Roland and Dr Richard W Morris from items selected from the Sickness Impact Profile and first published in Spine in 1983. Professor Roland notes that the original questionnaire and authorised translations on www.rmdq.org are in the public domain.

Copyright & Licensing

The original RMDQ and versions published on www.rmdq.org are in the public domain and may be used without permission. Prefer wording from the official site or validated translations to preserve measurement properties.

Administration Instructions

When your back hurts, you may find it difficult to carry out some of your usual activities. Below are some statements about those difficulties. For each statement, answer Yes if it applies to you today, or No if it does not. If a statement does not apply to you, answer No.

Scoring Methodology

The RMDQ lists 24 statements derived from the Sickness Impact Profile, framed around back-related function. The respondent indicates whether each statement applies today. Each Yes counts as one point. The total score is the sum of endorsed items (0-24). Higher totals indicate greater perceived disability. Official guidance recommends scoring items not applicable to the patient as No so the scale remains out of 24.

Scoring:
Lower is better

Meaningful Change Threshold

Distribution-based estimates of minimal clinically important difference (MCID) are often around 2 to 5 points, but values vary by population and anchor. In primary care cohorts an MCID near 3 to 5 points is frequently cited; confirm local protocols if comparing trials.

Score Interpretation

Understanding what your score means

low

0 - 6

Low disability - fewer activity limitations reported.

moderate

7 - 12

Moderate disability - a noticeable impact on daily activities.

high

13 - 24

High disability - marked limitation; may warrant targeted assessment and management.

Clinical Limitations & Considerations

The RMDQ measures back-related disability and is not specific for leg-dominant radicular pain in isolation. It is unidimensional and does not capture psychosocial or workplace factors. Ceiling and floor effects can occur at extremes of severity. Comparisons with the Oswestry Disability Index require caution as content and scoring differ. Self-report may be affected by mood, litigation, or social desirability.

Supporting Literature

Key validation and development studies for the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire

  1. 1

    A study of the natural history of back pain. Part I: Development of a reliable and sensitive measure of disability in low-back pain

    Roland MO, Morris RW

    Spine, 1983

  2. 2

    A minimal clinically important difference was derived for the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire for low back pain

    Jordan K, Dunn KM, Lewis M, Croft P

    Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2006

  3. 3

    The Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire and the Oswestry Disability Questionnaire

    Roland M, Fairbank J

    Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology, 2000

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